The United States is formulating plans to return to the moon by 2024 within the framework of the Artemis program — 55 years after NASA landed a man on the lunar surface during the Apollo days — but this time the mission is much different.

This time, NASA plans to put the
first woman on the moon upon the return. This time, the country doesn’t plan to
explore the Earth’s satellite and its mysteries and simply return home. This
time, the goal is to establish a lunar presence with an eye already cast toward
flights to Mars.

“NASA is going back to the moon and is committed to doing so by 2024,” said Mike Gold, vice president of civil space at Colorado-based Maxar Technologies. “The program is aptly called Artemis, because we are going to make history by this small step being a giant leap by putting the first woman on the surface moon.”

In Greek mythology, Artemis is the daughter of Zeus and twin
sister of Apollo. She is the goddess of the hunt and the moon.

“… this time we’re going back to
the surface of the moon to stay,” said Gold. “Which is why NASA is building the
Gateway.”

The Gateway project is an arm of Artemis. Gateway is a space station that will orbit the moon.

Gold recently joined political representatives and administrators from Maxar, NASA, Marshall Space Flight Center and Huntsville’s Dynetics at the latter’s campus on the western edge of the city for a press conference celebrating a “teaming agreement”’ between Maxar, Dynetics and NASA to develop Gateway.

NASA awarded Maxar a contract to
spearhead the development of power and propulsion elements (PPE), which is the foundation
of Gateway and spacecraft that will carry Americans back to the moon and
beyond. While Maxar is a leading company in space technology, the company
needed experienced partners in space travel and Dynetics was a fit to help get
Americans eventually to Mars.

In a press release, Dynetics billed
itself a responsive, cost-effective engineering and scientific firm with 2,000
employees providing IT solutions to national security, cybersecurity, space and
critical infrastructure sections.

The Artemis/Gateway playbook calls for the country to put astronauts back on the moon in 2024, to establish a sustained human presence on and around the moon by 2028 and then prepare for missions to Mars.

Dynetics
will provide support for the power and propulsion element and will aid
establishment of a sustainable presence on the moon.

Huntsville, long conjoined with
space exploration, will once again take on a large role in the process.

Huntsville Mayor Tommy Battle
relayed a message through Harrison Diamond, business relations officer for the
city, in honor of the “teaming agreement” signing between Gold and Dynetics CEO
David King.

“He said it’s a wonderful thing to
say you can’t get to the moon without going through Huntsville first,” Diamond
said. “And eventually to Mars.”